The Computer Music Center ( CMC ) at Columbia University is the oldest center for electronic and computer music research in the United States . It was founded in the 1950s as the Columbia-Princeton Electronic Music Center .
43-509: The CMC is housed in Prentis Hall , 632 West 125th Street, New York City , across the street from Columbia's 17-acre Manhattanville campus. The facility consists of a large graduate research facility specializing in computer music and multimedia research, as well as composition and recording studios for student use. Projects to come out of the CMC since the 1990s include: The director of
86-611: A consulting agency for other electronic music studios in the Western Hemisphere , giving them advice on optimum studio design and helping them purchase equipment. The staff engineers at the center under Peter Mauzey developed customized equipment to solve the needs of the composers working at the center. These include early prototypes of tape delay machines, quadraphonic mixing consoles, and analog triggers designed to facilitate interoperability between other (often custom-made) synthesizer equipment. The center also had
129-445: A wah-wah pedal . He later developed the distinctive "ladder" filter, which was the only item in the synthesizer design that Moog patented , granted on October 28, 1969. Further developments were driven by suggestions from musicians including Richard Teitelbaum , Vladimir Ussachevsky and Wendy Carlos . Carlos suggested the first touch-sensitive keyboard, portamento control and filter bank , which became standard features. There
172-569: A building off the main Columbia campus on 125th Street. Significant pieces of electronic music realized on the Synthesizer included Babbitt's Vision and Prayer and Charles Wuorinen 's Time's Encomium , which was awarded the 1970 Pulitzer Prize in Music. In 1964 Columbia Records released an album titled simply Columbia-Princeton Electronic Music Center , which was produced principally on
215-416: A commercially made Moog synthesizer. Moog constructed synthesizers to order. The first order for a complete Moog synthesizer, for which Moog had to design a keyboard and cabinet, came from the composer Eric Siday . With no books and no way to save or share settings, early users had to learn how to use the synthesizer themselves, by word of mouth, or from seminars held by Moog and Deutsch. Moog refined
258-555: A computer music studio under Godfrey Winham and Paul Lansky (see Princeton Sound Lab ). The original Columbia facility was re-organized in 1995 under the leadership of Brad Garton and was renamed the Columbia University Computer Music Center. Garton served as Director from 1995 until 2021, when Seth Cluett became Director joined by Anna Meadors as Assistant Director. Prentis Hall Too Many Requests If you report this error to
301-589: A large collection of Buchla , Moog , and Serge Modular synthesizers. By the late 1970s the Electronic Music Center was rapidly nearing obsolescence as its classical analog tape techniques were being surpassed by parallel work in the field of computer music . By the mid-1980s the Columbia and Princeton facilities had ceased their formal affiliation, with the Princeton music department strengthening its affiliation with Bell Labs and founding
344-524: A period, the name Moog became so associated with electronic music that it was sometimes used as a generic term for any synthesizer. Moog liked this, but disapproved of the numerous "cruddy" novelty records released with his name attached, such as Music to Moog By , Moog España and Moog Power . An early use of the Moog synthesizer in rock music came with the 1967 song by the Doors " Strange Days ". In
387-668: A restriction negotiated by the American Federation of Musicians (AFM). Robert Moog felt that the AFM had not realized that the synthesizer was an instrument to be learnt and mastered like any other, and instead imagined that "all the sounds that musicians could make somehow existed in the Moog — all you had to do was push a button that said ' Jascha Heifetz ' and out would come the most fantastic violin player". Although customers could choose any combination of modules, Moog sold several standard systems. In 1970, Moog Music released
430-561: A theremin, tape recorder, and single-pitch oscillator, a time-consuming process that involved splicing tape . Recognizing the need for more practical and sophisticated equipment, Moog and Deutsch discussed the notion of a "portable electronic music studio". Moog received a grant of $ 16,000 from the New York State Small Business Association and began work in Trumansburg, New York , not far from
473-765: A variety of ways via patch cords . The modules can also be used to control each other. They do not produce sound until a workable combination of modules are connected. The oscillators produce waveforms of different tones and overtones , such as a "bright, full, brassy" sawtooth wave , a thinner, flute-like triangle wave , a "nasal, reedy" pulse wave and a "whistle-like" sine wave . These waveforms can be modulated and filtered to produce more combinations of sounds ( subtractive synthesis ). The oscillators are difficult to keep in tune, and small temperature changes cause them to drift rapidly. As Moog's early customers were more interested in creating experimental music than playing conventional melodies, Moog did not consider keeping
SECTION 10
#1732772407291516-471: Is to assemble a whole out of parts. Moog initially avoided the word, as it was associated with the RCA synthesizer, and instead described his invention as a "system" of "electronic music modules". After many debates, Moog eventually told the composer Reynold Weidenaar : "It's a synthesizer and that's what it does and we're just going to have to go with it." Moog used the word in print for the first time in 1966. By
559-562: The Apollo 11 moonwalk , creating a link between electronic music and space in the American popular imagination. In 1968, Wendy Carlos released Switched-On Bach , an album of Bach compositions arranged for Moog synthesizer. It won three Grammy Awards and was the first classical album certified platinum . The album is credited for popularising the Moog and demonstrating that synthesizers could be more than "random noise machines". For
602-549: The Beatles . At its height of popularity, it was a staple of 1970s progressive rock , used by acts including Yes , Tangerine Dream and Emerson, Lake & Palmer . With its ability to imitate instruments such as strings and horns, it threatened the jobs of session musicians and was banned from use in commercial work for a period of time in the United States. In 1970, Moog Music released a portable, self-contained model,
645-471: The Minimoog , a portable, self-contained model, and the modular systems became a secondary part of Moog's business. The Minimoog has been described as the most famous and influential synthesizer in history. After the sale of Moog Music, production of Moog synthesizers stopped in the early 1980s. The patents and other rights to Moog's modular circuits expired in the 1990s. In 2002, after Robert Moog regained
688-517: The Minimoog . In the early 1960s, electronic music technology was impractical and used mainly by experimental composers to create music with little mainstream appeal. In 1963, the American engineer Robert Moog , a doctoral student at Cornell University who designed and sold theremins , met the composer Herb Deutsch at a New York State School Music Association trade fair in Rochester, New York . Deutsch had been making electronic music using
731-483: The voltage-controlled oscillator (VCO), which generated a waveform whose pitch could be adjusted by changing the voltage. Moog designed his synthesizer around a standard of one volt per octave . Similarly, he used voltage to control loudness with voltage-controlled amplifiers (VCAs). Moog developed a prototype with two VCOs and a VCA. As the VCOs themselves could output voltage, one could be used to modulate
774-407: The "Moog sound". The synthesizer can be played using controllers including keyboards , joysticks, pedals and ribbon controllers. The ribbon controller allows users to control pitch similarly to moving a finger along a violin string. New Scientist described the Moog as the first commercial synthesizer. It was much smaller than previous synthesizers, and much cheaper, at US$ 10,000 compared to
817-523: The "dotcom" or "5U" format, are still available but have been superseded as the dominant synthesizer format by Eurorack . Since 2020, Behringer has manufactured clones of Moog modules in the Eurorack format, also sold in configurations based on the original Moog systems. The Moog synthesizer has been emulated in software synthesizers such as the Arturia Modular V. In 2016, Moog released
860-762: The 1970s, "synthesizer" had become the standard term for such instruments. Most of the Moog modules were finalized by the end of the 1960s, and remained mostly unchanged until Moog Music ceased trading in the 1980s. Moog had pursued the development of his synthesizer as a hobby; he stressed that he was not a businessman, and had not known what a balance sheet was. He likened the experience to riding theme park amusements: "You know you're not going to get hurt too badly because nobody would let you do that, but you're not quite in control." The Moog synthesizer consists of separate modules – such as oscillators , amplifiers , envelope generators , filters , noise generators , triggers and mixers – which can be connected in
903-479: The 1970s, at the height of its popularity, the Moog was used by progressive rock bands such as Yes , Tangerine Dream and Emerson, Lake & Palmer . Keith Emerson was the first major rock musician to perform live with the Moog, and it became a trademark of his performances. According to Analog Days , the likes of Emerson "did for the keyboard what Jimi Hendrix did for the guitar". Almost every element of Donna Summer 's 1977 influential song " I Feel Love "
SECTION 20
#1732772407291946-764: The CMC is Seth Cluett , and the CMC offers classes taught by George E. Lewis , Seth Cluett , David Soldier , Anna Meadors, and Ben Holtzman , as well as visiting faculty who give seminars every year. In collaboration with the Visual Arts Program in the Columbia University School of the Arts, the Computer Music Center offers a Sound Art MFA Program directed by Miya Masaoka . The program was founded in 2014 by Douglas Repetto who served as Director until 2016. The forerunner of
989-542: The Columbia-Princeton Electronic Music Center was a studio founded in the early 1950s by Columbia University professors Vladimir Ussachevsky and Otto Luening , and Princeton University professors Milton Babbitt and Roger Sessions . Originally concerned with experiments in music composition involving the new technology of reel-to-reel tape , the studio soon branched out into all areas of electronic music research. The center
1032-735: The Cornell campus. At the time, synthesizer-like instruments filled rooms. Moog hoped to build a more compact instrument that would appeal to musicians. Learning from his experience building a prohibitively expensive guitar amplifier , he believed that practicality and affordability were the most important parameters. Previous synthesizers, such as the RCA Mark II , had created sound from hundreds of vacuum tubes . Instead, Moog used recently available silicon transistors — specifically, transistors with an exponential relationship between input voltage and output current . With these, he created
1075-506: The Moog synthesizer, with its dramatically new sounds, arrived at a time in American history when, in the wake of the Vietnam War , "nearly everything about the old order was up for revision". Session musicians felt synthesizers, with their ability to imitate instruments such as strings and horns, threatened their jobs. For a period, the Moog was banned from use in commercial work in the US,
1118-438: The RCA synthesizer. Most of the luminaries in the field of electronic music (and avant-garde music in general) visited, worked, or studied at the Electronic Music Center, including Edgard Varèse , Chou Wen-chung , Halim El-Dabh , Michiko Toyama , Bülent Arel , Mario Davidovsky , Charles Dodge , Pril Smiley , Alice Shields , Wendy Carlos , Dariush Dolat-Shahi, Kenjiro Ezaki and Luciano Berio . The center also acted as
1161-630: The Wikimedia System Administrators, please include the details below. Request from 172.68.168.151 via cp1112 cp1112, Varnish XID 922752051 Upstream caches: cp1112 int Error: 429, Too Many Requests at Thu, 28 Nov 2024 05:40:07 GMT Moog synthesizer The Moog synthesizer ( / ˈ m oʊ ɡ / MOHG ) is a modular synthesizer invented by the American engineer Robert Moog in 1964. Moog's company, R. A. Moog Co. (later known as Moog Music), produced numerous models from 1965 to 1981, and again from 2014. It
1204-656: The electronic music studio at the University of Toronto . After the presentation impressed the composers, Moog was invited by the Audio Engineering Society to present at their annual convention in New York City that October. Though he had not planned to sell synthesizers there, some customers placed orders at the show, and the choreographer Alwin Nikolais became the first person to purchase
1247-463: The first album on the West Coast to use the Moog synthesizer, The Zodiac: Cosmic Sounds (1967). Moog attended a recording session for the album, which helped convince him of the synthesizer's commercial potential. Garson also used the Moog to write jingles and soundtracks, which helped make its sounds ubiquitous. In 1969, Garson used the Moog to compose a soundtrack for the televised footage of
1290-460: The notion of voltage control and Moog's circuit designs were not original, Moog's innovations were in drawing the elements together, realizing that the problem of exponential conversion could be solved using transistor circuitry and building such circuits and making them work in a way that was of interest to musicians." Moog features such as voltage-controlled oscillator , envelopes , noise generators , filters and sequencers became standards in
1333-428: The oscillators stable a priority. The Moog's 24db low-pass filter is particularly distinctive, with a "rich", "juicy", "fat" sound. The filter, based on pairs of transistors connected by capacitors arranged in a ladder-like layout, attenuates frequencies above a level set by the user, and boosts the frequencies around the cut-off frequency. When overdriven, the filter produces a distinctive distortion described as
Computer Music Center - Misplaced Pages Continue
1376-412: The output of another , creating effects such as vibrato and tremolo . According to Moog, when Deutsch saw this, he became excited and immediately began making music with the prototype, attracting the interest of passersby: "They would stand there, they'd listen and they'd shake their heads ... What is this weird shit coming out of the basement?" In 1964, Moog and Deutsch demonstrated the synthesizer at
1419-738: The rights to the Moog brand and bought the company, Moog released the Minimoog Voyager , an updated version. Moog released several Minimoog reissues, with some changes, starting from 2016. In 2018, Moog released the Grandmother , followed by the Matriarch in 2019; parts of the circuitry used in these instruments were inspired by the Moog synthesizer. After production of the original Moog synthesizers stopped in 1980, some manufacturers, such as Synthesizers.com , created their own modules and clones of Moog modules. Moog modules, known as
1462-646: The same year, the Monkees used a Moog on their album Pisces, Aquarius, Capricorn & Jones Ltd. In 1969, George Harrison released an album of Moog recordings, Electronic Sound , and the Beatles used the Moog on several tracks on their album Abbey Road . Other rock bands who adopted the Moog include the Grateful Dead and the Rolling Stones . It was also adopted by jazz musicians including Herbie Hancock , Jan Hammer and Sun Ra . In
1505-553: The six-figure sums of other synthesizers. Whereas the RCA Mark II was programmed with punchcards , Moog's synthesizer could be played in real time via keyboard, making it attractive to musicians. According to the Guardian , Moog's 1964 paper Voltage-Controlled Music Modules , in which he proposed the Moog synthesizer modules, invented the modern concept of the analog synthesizer . The authors of Analog Days wrote: "Though
1548-449: The synthesizer in response to demand for more practical and affordable electronic music equipment, guided by suggestions and requests from composers including Herb Deutsch , Richard Teitelbaum , Vladimir Ussachevsky and Wendy Carlos . Moog's principal innovation was voltage-control, which uses voltage to control pitch . He also introduced fundamental synthesizer concepts such as modularity and envelope generators. The Moog synthesizer
1591-412: The synthesizer in response to requests from musicians and composers. For example, after Deutsch suggested Moog find a way to fade notes in and out, Moog invented an envelope module, using a doorbell button as a prototype. At the suggestion of the composer Gustav Ciamaga , Moog developed a filter module, a means of removing frequencies from waveforms. His first filter design created a sound similar to
1634-503: The synthesizer market. The ladder filter has been replicated in hardware synthesizers, digital signal processors , field-programmable gate arrays and software synthesizers. Most Moog synthesizers were owned by universities or record labels, and used to create soundtracks or jingles . By 1970, only 28 were owned by musicians. The Moog was first used by experimental composers including Richard Teitelbaum , Dick Hyman , and Perrey and Kingsley . The composer Mort Garson recorded
1677-468: Was brought to the mainstream by Switched-On Bach (1968), a bestselling album of Bach compositions arranged for Moog synthesizer by Wendy Carlos. Mort Garson used the Moog to soundtrack the televised Apollo 11 moonwalk, associating synthesizers with space in the popular imagination. In the late 1960s, it was adopted by rock and pop acts including the Doors , the Grateful Dead , the Rolling Stones and
1720-510: Was created with a Moog synthesizer, with the producers aiming to create a futuristic mood. Robert Moog was critical, saying the sequenced bassline had a "certain sterility" and that Summer sounded like she was "fighting the sequencer". In later decades, hip hop groups such as the Beastie Boys and rock bands including They Might Be Giants and Wilco "revived an interest in the early Moog synthesizer timbres". The Guardian wrote that
1763-434: Was debate as to the role of the keyboard in synthesizers. Some, such as the composer Vladimir Ussachevsky and Moog's competitor Don Buchla , felt they were restrictive. However, Moog recognized that most customers wanted keyboards and found they made the instrument more approachable. Including keyboards in photographs helped users understand that the synthesizer was for making music. The classical meaning of "to synthesize"
Computer Music Center - Misplaced Pages Continue
1806-652: Was officially established with a grant from the Rockefeller Foundation in 1959 which was used to finance the acquisition of the RCA Mark II Sound Synthesizer from its owner, RCA. The center's flagship piece of equipment, the RCA Mark II Sound Synthesizer, was delivered in 1957 after it was developed to Ussachevsky and Babbitt's specifications. The RCA (and the center) were re-housed in Prentis Hall ,
1849-733: Was the first commercial synthesizer and established the analog synthesizer concept. The first Moog synthesizers consisted of separate modules which create and shape sounds, which are connected via patch cords . Modules include voltage-controlled oscillators , amplifiers , filters , envelope generators , noise generators , ring modulators , triggers and mixers. The synthesizer can be played using controllers including keyboards , joysticks, pedals and ribbon controllers , or controlled with sequencers . Its oscillators produce waveforms , which can be modulated and filtered to shape their sounds ( subtractive synthesis ) or used to control other modules ( low-frequency oscillation ). Robert Moog developed
#290709